Füge eine Handlung in deiner Sprache hinzuAn Arkansas farmer stages a one-man war against corrupt land developers who want to evict him and his neighbors from their farms for real estate developments.An Arkansas farmer stages a one-man war against corrupt land developers who want to evict him and his neighbors from their farms for real estate developments.An Arkansas farmer stages a one-man war against corrupt land developers who want to evict him and his neighbors from their farms for real estate developments.
- Charlie Hunter
- (as Scott Glen)
- Fraser Child
- (as Laura Wetherford)
- Fraser Child
- (as Gerry Wetherford)
- Judge O'Connor
- (as Allan Wyatt)
- Man playing tennis
- (Nicht genannt)
- Christy
- (Nicht genannt)
- Henchman in black
- (Nicht genannt)
- Lorene Maddox's mother
- (Nicht genannt)
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This is, simply put, masterful exploitation from the House of Corman. Written and directed by one his most gifted acolytes (Jonathan Demme), and with an excellent cast (led by the almighty Peter Fonda), "Fighting Mad" features grim but realistic violence and more than a handful of genuinely powerful drama moments. The casting of Peter Fonda and Scott Glen as brothers is genius (though, sadly, Glen's role is small) and the beautiful Lynn Lowry is splendid as the girl unable to calm down her furious love-interest. Excellent music, great use of locations, and a lot of loathsome henchmen to make the enjoyment complete. One of the best of its kind and era, together with "The Farmer", "White Line Fever", and "Mr. Majestyk"!
Demme's third and final film for Roger Corman really shines. It's another formula picture, but this time it transcends the formulaic elements and comes close to feeling like a personal expression. It's got some serious flaws, including a really long, dead section leading up to the final climax, but you can see why Demme moved on after this one and started making films on his own.
Lynn Lowry has a significant role as Fonda's new girlfriend and fellow director George Armitage pops up as Man Playing Tennis.
Peter Fonda got off to an interesting start with Easy Rider, but it didn't take a lot of acting skill to cruise around on a Harley, stoned out one's gourd, so he wound up doing junk like this for producer Roger Corman.
I'm not going to give a synopsis of this thing, lest I start thinking about the time I wasted watching it. I just wanted to warn you 70s action fans out there to steer clear of Fighting Mad the next time Fox Movie Channel shows it. For the life of me, I can't understand why they chop up other movies for broadcast, but they slapped a TV-MA on this one because . . .
Hearing a couple "f-bombs" and seeing some boobage so helped advance the story. Don't get me wrong, boobs are just fine and a couple "fungoos" don't offend me. It's the fact that having the love interest of Peter Fonda scold him not to go out there and get hisself dead while airing out her mommy parts after sex isn't worth my time.
I must be getting old. In 1976, I would have elbowed my best friend to make sure he was grooving to the boobs on screen, the orangey blood being spilled, and the bad words that the three networks would hack out for broadcast.
Now.
Now, I look for things like originality, dialogue, depth and breadth of visuals, and intellectual stimulation. You know . . . the stuff you would never find in anything like Fighting Mad.
Tom Hunter (Peter Fonda) is a farmer that just returned home with his son for paying a visit to his dad Jeff; Pierce Crabtree (Philip Carey, a familiar face of the 1950s) is a land developer that wants to handle with his greedy hands some properties including Hunter's lands. Pierce soon employs various thugs for making people sell their lands for having coal, and among the first victims is Tom's brother Charlie (Scott Glenn) and his girlfriend while they're having a good time at home. After some other casualties Tom snaps and stars a private war against Crabtree and his henchmen using only his bow and arrow... I won't spoil how, but he'll win.
While it looks like one of those many drive-in movies from the 1970s (when videocassettes weren't even made) it's still good. Mostly because of the acting by all (Fonda, Glenn, Carey, John Doucette and a pre-WALKER TEXAS RANGER Noble Willingham) and also because of the idea. While it has already been used in other movies (and in a matter of years the RAMBO movies were made) here in a different contest it's still exciting.
Overall, not a must-see but still highly recommended if you are curious to see where some directors started or if you love the theme of a one-man fighting against an army.
Wusstest du schon
- WissenswertesThe period of principal photography on this picture was a shoot that ran for about five and a half weeks.
- PatzerWhen Len Skeritt gets up from the scuffle at the construction site, he puts his hat on, but when he walks over to grill the "security expert", he's seen putting his hat on again.
- Zitate
Sheriff Len Skerritt: [after arriving to break up a street fight and points his shotgun] Everybody freeze!
[to Tom]
Sheriff Len Skerritt: Drop that iron!
[Tom tosses it to the ground, but it ends up hitting one of the workers on the foot]
Sheriff Len Skerritt: Or am I going to have to start kicking asses and taking names?
- VerbindungenFeatured in 42nd Street Forever! Volume 1: Horror on 42nd Street (2004)
- SoundtracksThe Bleeding Heart Inn
Words and Music by Zorro and the Blue Footballs
Copyright © 1976 Chuck Lunch Publishing
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Details
Box Office
- Budget
- 600.000 $ (geschätzt)